Around $1800 depending on condition. In July 2009 one sold on E-Bay for 1200 Euros.
It is worth 52 U.S dollars
how much I have 2 of them 1910,1906
The currency that is currently worth the most is the Kuwait dinar, worth US$3.45.
1.19
Around $1800 depending on condition. In July 2009 one sold on E-Bay for 1200 Euros.
It is worth 52 U.S dollars
There is no world currency know as a lyre, though there is the Turkish lira. 50 lira is worth about 28 US dollars. For future reference, you can Google ''50 lira in USD", and Google will convert it for you in today's rates.
about $50 dollars US currency
As of 30th July, 2011, 50 NOK equals 9.22 US Dollars.
50 Rupee is 90 cents in US currency.
how much I have 2 of them 1910,1906
50 yen is worth approximately 0.49 US Dollars. This is based on the currency exchange rate of 1 yen being equal to 0.0097 US Dollars.
the value of the 1964 50 apaxmai itenthkonta in th u.s.
Currently, 50 Afghani dollars are worth $0.89 cents. The Afghani dollar is the currency of Afghanistan. The US dollar is used by many countries in the world.
In December 2012, 50 kr. are as much as $0,39.
The coin doesn't read "50 koiieek", but rather "50 КОПЕЕК" (pronounced "kopek" in English) - the coin is from Russia (or its predecessor, the Soviet Union) and it is written in the cyrillic alphabet. (Pre-Soviet Russia also had coins denominated in kopeks, but the spelling in Russian was different.) The coin's numismatic value depends - the 50 kopek coins issued by the Soviet Union between 1924 and 1991 could be worth between about 10 US cents and 70 US dollars, depending on year and condition, and a few of the proofs from the 1920's are valued at US$400-US$500; the more modern ones issued by Russia since 1997 are worth little more than a US dollar in Uncirculated condition, and face value in circulated condition. From a foreign exchange standpoint, only the Russian coins issued in or after 1997 have any value - as of February 9, 2011, there were about 29.4 roubles to the US dollar, so 50 kopeks is equal to a bit under 2 US cents. Note, finally, that the early Soviet 50 kopek coins (1924-1927) were 90% silver and contained 0.2893 troy ounces of the metal (worth, with silver at US$30.30 per troy ounce as of February 9, 2011, about US$8.76), but their numismatic value is almost certainly higher.